Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, March 30, 1918, Final, Image 13

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, SATUBDAY, MAR0 30, 1918
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B5
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'V
V.
BREEZY SPRING NOVELS
Diplomatic Life in
China and Japan
THE
BEST PEOPLE
ny anni: wauwick:
Author of "Victory Law,"
Tho Unprctctidcrs," etc.
Cloth, SI. SO iiri
Tho travel romanco of a girl a
Is tired of her ".Main trict Town"
In tho American Went nntl leaves to
mtnglo In a whirl of rojaltv nnd
diplomatic splendor In the Ablatio
.ist.
A Rainbow Romance
Set in Venice
THE BEST
IN LIFE
ny MLmnr hini:
Author of "Autumn, '
"IJartli." etc.
Cloth. SI SO net
"Can wo tpcnlc of a wninnti at an
adventurcbs without iiITonse.' IrocI
Dark ns surely ono, jet yhc w.is
nlvvais un engaging tlgiire, tniiiman.il
Ing our mlmltatlon nnd (ymiuthy
Tho dram.t through hlili she mnvrH
li well constructed and calculated to
hold tho Intcrcvt to the end "
Vein YoiK Tnbunr
Third Edition
The Baffling
Detective Story
THE MYSTERY
OF THE DOWNS
ny J. n. watson' a .1 r.i:i:s
Authors of "Tho Hampstead
Ml story."
Cloth. St ,0 art
"Tho plot Is oilclnal nnd Is mi
reived and developed with skill Tho
Interest It heightened hy the Intro
duction of a oinple ei j iitngram
relating to the biding placo of a largo
hum of nioncj "
UprlngflrUl Hcpulhcait
The Love Story
of a Bachelor
COELEBS
By V. K MIU.S VOl .(5
Author of "The Illg-imlst, '
"Tho ISjwonncr," etc
Chili. Si iO net
Tells hovr n "contlrmcd bachelor
wai converted to tho new wartime
standard for women and to matri
mony! OF ALL BOOKSELLERS
JOHN LANE CO., NEW YORK
By John Galsworthy
Five Tales
J n thcbc stories Mr, Galsworthy returns
to the tyjic of character which he so niastcr
fully'depictcd in those great stories of Eng
lish social life "The Man of Property,'
"The Country House," etc. The reader
familiar with those earlier works will wel
come an old acquaintance in "Indian Sum
mer of a Forsyte" a name which stands
for the conservative, intensely rcspcctahlc,
prosperous, and socially established man.
It will be seen that each story is built
around a single dominant character. They
arc stories which it is not easy to lay down.
$1.50 net
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S
SONS
Ready Shortly
DEDUCTIONS FEM WORLD WAR
By LIEUTENANT-GENERAL
paroix "Jon jfrcjtagilotung()otJeu
DEPUTY CHIEF OF THE IMPERIAL GERMAN GENERAL STAFF
"There la much In this work of thn most dla'lncu hd of Oerrnan writers on Mili
tary matters to set us tlilnklne srlouiI . . Its upon has been prohibited, ana
comment on Its conclusions In tho German press r'norously suppressed. These facts
bear witness to Its slgnincancc. . Important portions of tho book are thos
which admit explicitly or Impl city tho German failures." TUB MOIlKIM) TOST,
London.
"Tho paclrtst, tho peaee-dreamer. tho believer In tho democratic Ideal, may alike,
find valuable materials for thought hi these 'DEDUCTIONS 111051 THE ai'.EAT
VVAn.' "THE DAILY TELEailAl'H. London
THE EXPORT FROM GERMANY IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. IT
WAS INTENDED THAT THE ALLIES SHOULD NOT HAVE ACCESS
TO THE BOO. IN THIS INTENTION GERMANY HAS BEEN
DEFEATED.
$1.25 net. All Bookseller!
New York
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Credit of the Nations
A STUDY OF THE EUROPEAN WAR
By J. Laurence Laughlin
Emeritus Prof, of Political Economy hi the University of Chicago.
This impres'sivc study of war finance tip to the
entrance of our country as a belligerent is the result of
the closest scrutiny of the operations of the belligerents.
Dr. Laughlin, who has had this work in preparation
since August, 1914, reveals in a manner most illuminating
both the operations and their actual bearing upon the
, progress of- the war, and so makes itt possible for the first
time to understand a phase of the situation of which the
generally otherwise informed public is wholly ignorant.
The Subject is divided into 'five main topics
Tlie Keooomlo Situation I'rccrdlng The War
War ami rriillt French Money and Credit
KnVll.l. Credit Oper.tU.r 1'"- Credit Operation.
With 8 Charts. ?3.00 net. v
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S
U i
;SONS
" 1.
ruKiauiOLICY OF
HOW WILSON DIFFERS FROM
A SOUTH AMERICAN INDIAN-
The Aborigine Went So Fast One Day He Had
to Wait the Next for His Soul
to Catch Up
T UON'T lil,o nil this criticism of
- tho President In Congios," ip
niaiKed Doctor McFubrc.
lie had been leading the lepoit of
1 Tuesilaj s debate In tho Senate ns ion
I mined In tho Congressional I'.ecord
which Owen had lent lilnv.
"So vou think tho king run lo no
wrong. Owen nktd with a smllo as
ho heljied himself to ono of my cigars,. '
Doctor Mcl'abic smoked a. few mo
mints Jn slluico.
"N'o, I don't qulto mean that," ho
cililiuil hctltatlusly. "I know that
as n gmcral iuIo wo must not nsume
Infallibility In our isecutlves. 1 sup
pose I mil to iinvlous that nothing
should bo tloiio that tan In nny way
hamper tho Administration in Wash
ington that t am a llttla impatient
with any comment that seems to give
aid nnd comfort to tho cnem."
"Your feelings do uedlt to jour
patriotism, doctor" 1 icmail.cd. "Wc
aie all for tho win, and It Is beeauso
wo aro m enthusiastically in favor
of its vlgmous pto'ccutlon that wo sue
impitlent with delnvft anil blunders
If tho enemj i in git nny comfort out
of vigorous prodding of tho 1'iiMilent,
IliUudod to In lug about a quicker de-
Over There and Back
By Lieut. Joteph S. Smith
Wc thank E. V. Dutlon & Co.
for this book light out of the
hcait of the maelstrom of war.
For it gives us, through the
smoke, a gleam of n holy grail
that death cannot kill, tho over
sought, but rarely found, spirit of
beauty in human love for fcllow
man nnd animal friend, the sym
bol of the greater humanity that
U to win in tho end and cstablUh
this old woild again as a footpath
to the stars.
Philadelphia Record.
$1 ."0 .Vft. Postape l'xtra. All UoeUfore .
I. P. DUTTON & CO., 6S1 Stk Are , N. Y.
"", "4l
FIFTH AVENUE,
NEW YORK
London
FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK
LWLHBLaHLHMLlLMHLi
lL tciiki(itt MS
feut of the Germans thej aic wclcotne
to It. to far as I nm concerned "
"That Is tho way I feel, too,'' Owen
nsi ced
"I luvo been reading two books this
week" l went on, "which havo initio
mo wonder whether 1 ought to till ou
wnut i think of them Ono of them it
a dlseu-.tioti of the nrinrlnlr .if Amn.
lean dlplomacj , by John Kassott Moore.
ono of our best t;uallllcd ivptrts on In-
tunatlona! law, and tho other deils
with tho foielKU policy of I'riMdeht
Wilson. H is written bv two assistant
pmiessois in Leland Stanford Junloi
I t'nierlty. I am In no quandary about
1 Mr. Mooro'n book, sao as lils enuncia
tion of prlnciplcj) cm bo recirdcd as
ciltlclsm of tho l'resldent. Tlio o.her
book ii so tnthuslastically culORlstio
of .Mr. Wilson that if It appeared at
an other tlnm It would rtccio thu
tuatinent that it desercs."
"Then ou think the President's for
eign policy has not beeen wholly huc
cessful" Owen wanted to know.
"1 do, mo emphatic illj," bald I
"N'o moio stupendous blunder has been
undo bj nn American President than
that of which Mr. Wilson wis eulltj
in his dealing with McUo Yet the
California professors fcciu to think
Hint his courso was both MKceWuI
and justifiable. You know ho sent
woul to Hucrti that ho must retlio
fioin tho MeMcm presidency, that he
must hold an election and that ho
tntist not bo a enndidato In that elec
tion, and ho announced that ho would
ictoenbo no Mexican 1'icsident whose
title to olllco was no better than that
of llueita. Tho California professors
can nco nothing wrons in this. Mr.
Moore, however, in his introduction,
ends attention to tho principles of for
i clgn policy laid down at the beginning,
under which tho American republic
acted on tho thcoiy that Governments
ato existing entitles and mado no at
tempt to decldo whether they were
lcKltlmite or illegitimate under tho
local constitutions And In his chap
ter on nonlnteient!ou and tho Momoo
PoctHnc Mr. Mooro quotes Jcffcr;on'rt
famous letter to Uomerneur Mori Is,
our iepresentatlo In J'lanco. in the
rum so of which Jelferson, paid that
we lould not deny to any nation that
right whereon our own Gov eminent Is
founded to change Its form at will and
to transact Its butlness with foreign
nations through whatever organ It
thinks proper. Then Mr. Mooro re
marks that tho test of a government's
tltlo to recognition is not its thcorcti
cal legitimacy, 'but tho fact of IN ev
istenco as tho apparent exponent o
tho popular will." Then ho tcmlnds
us that recognition Is accorded to a
Government when it has demonstiated
Its ability to exist, nnd that it cannot
bo withheld unless tho withholding
Government Intends to intervene, ns
wlthholdlnc recognition Is In Itself a
form of Intervention."
"That Is what "Wilson did In Mex
ico," said Owen. "Ha not only re
fused to recosnlzo Hucrta, but did
ever) thing in his power to oust him
from office. I seem to remember that
after Hucrta had left Mexico the
spokesmen of the Administration
boasted that tho Tamplco Hag incident i
had been seized upon ns an oppor.
tunlty for dcallns tho final blow to
Huerta. nnd that although tho uas
was not saluted Huerta was forced
out"
' We hav c not forgotten that even
I if tho whole Mexican Mtuation has ,
hcen lost Right of hecauso of greater
i
I
CMrnao Itailj .Yel sajs''A pleco of
literature which posterltj will rcctlvo us
Immortal,"
UNDER FIRE
By Henri Barbutie (Le Feu)
51,50 .Vff. rottaa Extra. Alt Bool.atorr)
E. P. DUTTON tc CO., 6S1 5lk Are ,N.Y.
LETTERS
TO THE
MOTHER
OFA
SOLDIER
By RICHARDSON WRIGHT
"A book that I want to ret Into thi
hands of ever) rnllsttj mother. 1 sin
cerely believe that it Is f'.i- took of the
last six months The letters contain
much beauilful sentiment uhhout sentl
mentalltj. much sane, clearly thought out
aaMca dtt anser many ilefply serious
questions "lltnrv Wlac.mau Stlt, i (!
cl.lcjao Daily .Vfui
The RIDER
in KHAKI
By NAT GOULD
With this roel Nst Gould. ' the supreme,
fitorlts of ths fhtlnr man." Is Intro
duced to ths American public. This nrst
oftsrln Is a wholesome, esclllnc tory of
clean sport and darlnc adtentur In ths
Great War.
11,000,000 Nt CtulJ nutlt
SiU InCtfttBrlflnl
The HOUSE
of CONRAD
Br EUAS TOBENK1N
JvHior o "IVItU Jrrlcei."
"Deserves a warm welcome from Ameri
can readers becaus. of Its Intrinsic In.
"rest and artistry. Ih atnear Hy ef It.
snlrlt. and It. vry ireat valua at iv
Sfctirt f lha unconscious processes ;f
Am.r"anliatl.n at work, upon TU mind,
and loula f Immlfrant.." V. 1, r.
STOKES, publisher
r- .iti .r ,.' v
PRESIDENT WILSON
x. r " ytsJSllMMMfrsM " .". w-ww- ,
1 I sP&
.101LN HASSKTT MOOUi:
"Author of "Principles of American Diplomacy.
tioublis In Kutope," said I. "It Is my
own opinion tint tho Wilson pollo
In Mexico linn undono tho woik of
cars of effoi t by American Matcsmen
to conclllato I. itlu Amtrlci and to
Impress upon it a rcalli.itlou of out
dlslnteicsted friendship. If ou want
to know how completely tho President
has turned his lucl; on centui-old
precedents oti ought to ic.ul Moure."
"1 have his 'Aiiu.ric.iu Dlploin .' '
said Owtn
"The id w book Is a uwiltlng and
elalKiiatlon of the o'd one, bilnglug it
up to d ite," v.ild 1 ' The book of the
California piofesois Is vvoith while In
splto of its defects, for It tells In
clnonologlcal form tho story of the
Mexican and South American policy
of tho President nnd also the fctoiy
of our relations to tho great wai. This
compact summary Is valuible, and
nno can reid It with profit if ono can
' lie patient with tlio evident nssump-
tion of tho compilers that tho 1'icsl-
t dont Is almost Infallible. They me
well pleiscd with tho result of the
diplomatic negotiations with Germans
and with tho l'l csldenl'.s patlciao
with tho IvlriK nernnns In Hcrlln I
stinno-so his dellbciation may bo cv
i cusclI on tho ti,cory that ho had to
wait until tho nation was behind him
"Do ou know, his courso reminds
mo bl contrast of tint of a Pouth
American Indian of whom 1 Iieaid
Doctor ranabee. of tho rnlvcreitJ,
talk In I.ansdovvno tho other nicni
.,.,. i i.o.i .i. t,iion mu n 1'tililn
'", ' . ,. ,, ,fcr,,i ,,
and ono morning tho man lefuscd to ,
move, no epiiineu uku un'i "
0t)O KO fast t10 ,iay betoro ho lnd
I eft lls bou ),ci,lnil and ho wanted to
walt for lt to catch up with him
!; jfp. Wilson was apparently
j 'a(luli to K0 very fast for fear tint
tlio Ameilcan houl would la brliiml.
rjut r iiavo m0ro tonllilencc In tho
Aln(.,icin sniilt than that. AVli.it we
ncedcd was hplritual Icadeiship. There
iiicuiu .. i .,,,
was a Hplcndld opportunity befoio t he
man In the Whlio iiouso to wunu ui
l clarion call. Hut ho did not do It.
And the war will last n jear or two
more than lt ought to do, simply for
1 tho lack of that determined summons
. from the mnn in nuthorlty. The nation
I w ould liav o responded."
I "Thero Is llttlo doubt of It." paid
Dot tor Mcr.ibi e.
' 'Thero is no doubt of It." Owen In
sisted. "I Iiopo jou do not thlnl: I have
been Baying ans thine I should not
t,ald I. "Now wo nro in tho war wo
aro going to peo lt through und sup
port tho President. Hut wo aro not
' going to surrender our right to prod
him on from behind If ho falls to lteep
far enough ahead of us In his capacity
' ns national leader."
, gcorgr vr. norot..s.
1 pnixctPi.c or" AjtrjRifAN' pnux)iiv(;r
, !! John Basiett Moore, professor nf In-
' t.rnstlonal law and illplomacv nt roluin-
1,1a I'nlverslty and foiwrli rounlor for
Hl Drntrtmext of Ctato snd Assistant
Secretary nf State. New TorU: Harper
a. urns .-
nr wnniiiiniv
11,11. i "rii,i l.,-
WlIOV I 111 1.1 II IT ItJ
Tiir; Tvitiijiov ivu.icT
Hdmr 15 Jlnhln-
Ian Comiuiu
Outwitting; German Spies
"Tho War Cache." by W Douclas
Newton, would bo moro entertaining In
Its thrilling story of tho matching of
wits of a group of Kngllsh patriots
against German spies If tho author did
not drop at times Into n somewhat
"emart" stI and if tlio dialtguo was
not ft bit too abundantly sprinkled with
the peculiarly stodgy Uritlsh elang,
which makes some parts of the other
wlo capital yarn irritating to tho Amer
ican reader. Wo really cannot reckon
from' the context what "stash" moans on
page 14, and It Is no moro easy to guess
It on the following page.
Tho plot li very Ingenious and com
plicated. Romo young Kngllsh officers
and a beautiful volunteer nurse get pos
session of Important German docu
ments. Cleverness and patience result
in the decoding of ono paper which tolls
of tho experience of a "war cache" under
a bombed house. To win their way to
It and turn lt to national advantage is
no light task, but Involves keenness, re
ouroefulness, dangerous adventures and
the menace of death A love theme
varies the Intrigue. German espionage
la -vanquished and Cupid Is a victor in
ma ouiwnim
W A1 CACHE
Hr.W, Douclai N'sw
SOn HSS'SIHIU iiruir.i'i , ........ .. j... . . , ,i(,v flrfl
sltv. and Victor J W'est nsltnt tiro- i Letters of
fessnr of political jr-lene. '.'I'"1' s',?nI"l llshed
ir. i nitrrsii r- iun ... .'--
rrErt'.crs2S3SJnj3
Gossip About Books
and Their Makers
Ju-eph IVunell's ' IMctures of War
, Work In .nierlc.i" his received tho
warm commendation of two men who
know what thev represent better than
any one cNe Secietaiy of War Ualtcr
wrote the author ' I have teen cnouch
of tho subjects with whli'i Mr. I'm
I.clls llthocraphs deal In b ir witness
tii tlio extraordliiarll vivid present i
tlon which they mal.e of nomo of tho
mot linpoitant of our n.itloul actlvl-tl.-s
at tho pic-ent time" Secretarj
of the .Navy Haulfls mote '1 wish to
evpnss to ou my appreciation of how
perfetlly on have conceived and exe
cuted the war work In tho nuklne ofTlio lentral lovo theme of tho story Is
great sum and thlp construction Your ' the affair between tho Duho of Mon
,ir . I,,..., mi.hIa n urv sti.iTur .innr.ii n mouth and Henrietta Wcntworth. the
i mo and I am only loo clad to corn-
mend them publlcls " .N'o other llvlnpi.ory jrs Xapean'u ' roinanco of tho
nan ,, l3 ,,aJ tl opportunity clven Mr
i.elllK.j ,. tho Government to lnapewt
nl(l r(,prouuco ,il(, eBantic war prep -
ai.itlotis now under way in trio unitea
States I ho l.lpplncotts publish his
bouK
IIenr living Uodse, author of hl.in
nei s Illg Idea," Just publlslud by the'
Harper.', recently traveling on tho ele
vated with a friend, remarked that he
was getting old, and very muth dls- Kihool and Homo Girdening by
liked rushing around from ono place to i Kary Cadmus Ilavla, I'll U, Is a thor
anolher. At bin words a Mrangcr, who lough-going tet book that will make
was Hti.iphanglng in front of him, said. Wnr gardens profitable for )oting people
uiu' vouro not oiu uo ami get re -
luvenated: try 'skinner's Ulc Idea ' llicr
heard of It" Hiding his surprise, Mr.
I)ods sM. .cs- wer8 ,,,,, J0U hear
of li' tiio uanger, a seaman. iom
him that tho book had fallen Into his
hands a foiv dtyi previously when his
hiun nan touciieu at wauao, i-cru air.
Dodge asked him If ho liked It. "riuro !'
was the rrpl "It's a very great htorv.
I followed out tlio Idea at oncj " "In
that iate, 1 confess I wroto It ' said
Ml Uoilfce
Vance Thompson, whoso ' l.at and
Oroiv Thin" hint brought physical com
.i.-woit and mental natlafactlon to loO,
0(l) rlIors aml die,, anu bou
Woman" 1 generally acknowledged to
bo tho most fcarililnr; and brilliant
discussion of tho riucstlon of feminism
ns lili "Drink" Is of tho alcoholic prob
lem to bo found In current books. Is
now In l'rinco attached to tho head
quarters Ftaff of (Jencral retain. At
present ho Is aiding In the co-ordination
of V M. C. A. work In tho Trench und
tho American armies. Mr. Thompson
has llvtd much In Franco and knows
thoroughly tho country nnd tho people
of ruml lesions as well as of tho cities.
All of Mr Thompson's books aro now
i published b 1
l nutton & Co , who
havo taken over nil that have been
published heretoforo by other houses.
Houston Jliinin Company announce
tho twentieth printing of Mildred AI-
drlch's "A Hilltop on tho Marne," the
fourth of Wlllluin Vorko Stevenson's
"At the Tront In a I'llvver," and the
seventh of "lljmns and rra"rs for
tho Vso of the Army and Navy."
Tho recent 6alo of tho Ilearn art
colli ctlon in N'ewr York, nt which George
Inness's picture, 'The Wood Gatherers," '
brought $30,000, "tho biggest price and i
tho topuotch of enthusiasm," as ono of
tho papers said, ircalla ttie early Btrug-I
gles of this great American artist, as ,
reported In "ino Life, Art, anu i
Georgo Inness, recently pub.
from tho pen of Georgo Inness,
Jr. Mr Inness tells many anecdote?
throwing light on his fathers financial
dimcultlcs, though his prldo was always
greater than his poverty, "Ono time,"
writes Mr. Inness, "when a man who
is known to bo ono of the world's rich-,
est magnato camo to Pop's studio, he ,
admired a certain canvas extravagantly
and asked ths prlco, which was given
him as j:000. Tho gentleman, after ad.
miring It for some time, said, 'Mr.
Inness, I will glvo ou $1500 for It'
Father went to the easel, removed the
canvas and turned Its face to tho wall.
'Oh, hold on, Mr. InntBs; I should like
to look at that picture again.' 'Tou will
havo to excuse me,' replied father, 'I nm
not selling pictures today. I nm very
busy, nnd w HI bid j ou good day.' "
A bookseller who has read "Oh,
Money 1 Money I" Kleanor II. Porter's
new book, noon to be published by
llougton Mimin Company, eais: '.it is
pleasant to be ablo to help people an
ticipate a good story with nothing of
war in It that Is tho great demand
Just now."
The sixth largo printing of Prof,
George Herbert Clarke's anthology, 'A
Treasury of War Poetry,' comes si
multaneously with nn announcement
reform the publisher", llougton Mifflin
Company, that the book Is also to be
Issued, in an .edition In raised tjpe Ur
th Tolloit. .. ' K.i'L
I VJ
REVIEWED
REINCARNATION OF
A STUART PRINCESS
urs. iNnpcnn bets l-ortn n
Novel Clnim for Considera
tion for Her Novel
ft was Sir Walter It Weigh living nnd
.djlng something lllm n cmturj before
'tlio day of tho "Merrv Monaich ' so
called, who told hi? contemporaries In
ions of his writing that 'lilstnij hath
triumphed over time, which lit hIiUi It
nothing but eteinlt lnth tiluinphed
over" If Kir Walter had postponed his
mundane rejourn until, mv, tho period
of tho Muart 15storatlon ho might have
qualified his lcmarl: for then doubt
less ho would have coino Into contact
with a ladj who bv her own declaration
In V. hHAnA .. , l , . ... n... ..
.i. niv i-tviiuu ui ht iioui, ,iy io
Kings." has outwitted old Clirotios him-
self by reappearltnt In this veal of itraee
19H nnd hetlouslv uitratlns In the
form of n hlhtniiral novel hi r memoirs I
of reventccnth emtuiv venls, -t 11 of
which fho raw and put of which she i
wan In tho relen of Charles II, liielml- I
Intr tho dlrastious attunpts of tlm kit-I
ter'n ill-starred son, .lames Dultu or
Mo.'mouth, to mount a throne d n. d him !
by reason of his ' left-handed' birth I
' It is a rurlom piece of writing which '
JIr. Kvan Xapoan has evolved from
what rho roberlv lnforuiH her reader1
'htr Inner concloUsncs of n. past burled
,by thrt dust of luarlv two and a lnlf '
, centuries The uovellKt. profewsen to,
luvo Stuart blood In her vein", and to
lnvo actually lived from 1674 to 1CS0
at tho court of C'hirles II, whom she
designates as "oousln" tliioughout the
purea of hei unusual narr.itlvo Vppar-
ently sho Is firmly lomlmeil tint ns
' ' Charlotb' Mu irt" he was on n l m of
the irreitest but wltlul dlwreet intlniacj (
xs 1th tint inonirih nnd his son. who In
I tho closing cliaptein of her nor she
tails "ICInt: Monmouth "
Th Idei of rtlneirnit.on i" ns old
as Kceitlel time, and lt cult Is bv no .
means conllncd to the iriysterlous llaat. I
as Is evidenced bv the rntiilnr wtth vhteli I
Mrs Xapean nures hrr leaders that In l
relating her expel lences as an Intimate
aocIato of Kin,? Chutes II and his i
court, Including Xill Uwnn, foi wlitm
sho lnil n Kcnulnn feminine affection
she Is simply making use of hereditary
memory, hiving shrewdly lift "--nine of
the doors opni behind her" when her
" foimer oxlstmco came to Its natural ,
'period Ihero Is not much pjlltles In
3Irs Nanean's hlstorVal roumice which
i,,Ml:', IlIm,ott c;-y 't1 ''"' l0;
inciiK .vim ii'iruii.ii nmi- .,. i,,w in vn v.
her "two Uliig"," Charles and Monmouth.
She shows herself an earnest and admir
ing champion of then lojal Individuals
whoc characters have been less 1 Indly
treated bv calloila hKoilans. 1 icl.lng i
the synipathj of Kinship to gnldo their
delineations XVlille not glossing per- '
onal fallings, tho "reincarnated" au
thor glve-i a unique Interpretation of
('tunics II by repie'-mtlng him a a'
wiser, cleverer and altogether much
more capablo monarch than ho is gen
erally po'traied In hlstorv of tho dr.v
as.dut "-ort, and ono who wore his mxsl;
of iMottpti to pleosuro foi no other
reason thill to l.eep a llrm hold on his
throne and epeapo tho fate of his father
and the fate which befell his bon at tho
hands of his Implacable uncle, James II
onlv woman the luckless prince evei
fjtw- li.l AVhatver worth a hls-
Stuart He
no doubt
halu a,f
estoratlon may nave, mere is
tliat It possesses a certain
an Incentlvo to a Htudy of
Kwr,t nf h nisi, wh eh Is always an
. ntructlv mental process
my TWO KtNT.s v Novel nf th Stuart i
Itetftrrnllon ji- Mr.
i:nn Nifjn
tllLin-
tiatfil s llli iiortmltK .Now York
Dutlon L Co Si TO
i: r.
Gardening for Young
People
1 it is written In easy, iniorm imo mjis-,
, within fh romnroheiulon of Its audience
r0ol bhortago has mado liacl.Mird and
'Vacant lot "farming ' Important for
i vdnnlns tho war. mis hook imi an
ti,0 average child will need to know, it
i tells how and why. Plans, ttc , Illustrate
thn tett. Tho writer is a jacuuy hkhi-
her of tho Knapp scnooi or t-oumry
Lite Cleort I'cabody Collego for Teach
ers and author of rioductive runn
ing" i.mmi. AND 1IOVIIJ miuit' .Mi. iiv
i arv Odmm liis In i
J It. Llpvlncott fompjnj
l'hlliiUduhU
81 -S
The Earthquake
By Arthur Train
Tim v.n havo "Mr. Brltllnir
Hees It ThrcAigh" rhu
followed Miss Sinclair's
'Tree of Heaven" nnd now,
'The KarthmiaLe," a worthy
third, but by no means
least member of an im
mortal trio. Indeed, Mr
Train's book may bo tho
most impressive nnd ef
fective of the three"
ew York Tribune
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CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Author of "OVER THE TOP"
It's another "OVER THE TOP" book
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ismXtih. i ' l f i ' . " ?" " '"'T
TODAY'S
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How tlu-e few gallant men of
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in the new hook,
TO BAGDAD
WITHTHE BRITISH
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THIS IS AN APPLETON BOOK '
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r
The Voice of Lincoln
By R. M. Wanamaker
Justice of the Supreme Court of Ohio
1 Ins boolv differs radically from all others .ibout ' '
Lincoln. It is not so much an exposition of Lincoln's
character and genius bv another as a revelation of his " i
character and Renins by himself. Judge Wanamakqr
lias selected with skill and insight those utterances,
including many of Lincoln's .letters, conversations
nnd speeches, which arc the key's to the different sides
nf his great nature and so uncover the springs of his
conduct both in general and in the crises of his life.
These utterances have their place in a narrative
text which supplies the information required to a full
understanding of their biographical and historical
significance. $2.50 ncl.
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S
SONS
jRFii
jX. fftitit JWj
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'lit V
leMtmA
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